Local area network/wide area network switch

ABSTRACT

A local area network/wide area network (LAN/WAN) switch is presented which aggregates LAN traffic onto SONET/SDH transport streams in a programmable manner. The system can concentrate Ethernet packets and map the data onto SONET streams at data rates varying from STS-1 to STS-12C. Depending on the bandwidth available in the WAN interface, different numbers and combinations of STS-n streams can be formed. The system allows for efficient and flexible mapping of LAN traffic onto a WAN for transport over fiber optic networks.

CROSS-REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/484,985, entitled “Ethernet Concentration Apparatus”, filed on Jan. 18, 2000, which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/125/528, entitled “Ethernet Concentration Apparatus”, filed on Mar. 22, 1999. This application is incorporated herein by reference but is not admitted to be prior art.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Local Area Networks (LANs) are used as the basis for communications between computers and other network elements in business, campus, and residential environments. The predominant protocol for LAN communications is Ethernet, which can be realized in a number of formats including 10BASE-Tx, 100BASE-Tx, 1000BASE-FX, and Gigabit Ethernet. The Ethernet physical and data link layer (Layer 1 and Layer 2) specifications define how computers can communicate information over the various types of physical connections which can include twisted wire pairs, coaxial cables, and fiber optic cables.

Wide Area Networks (WANs) are the means in which data is transmitted between locations, and can include the transmission of data between buildings or campuses. The data is typically transported over telecommunications circuits which are provided by Interexchange Carriers (IXCs, also known as long distance providers), Competitive Access Providers (CAPs), Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers (ILECs), and Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (CLECs). Although these circuits can exist in a number of formats and data rates, a commonly used format is the Synchronous Optical Network (SONET)/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) standards developed for the transport of data over fiber optic networks. The SONET/SDH standards support the transport of data at data rates varying from 50 Mb/s Synchronous Transfer Signal-1 (STS-1)) to 10 Gb/s (STS-192).

Present equipment provides for the ability to map Ethernet to SONET/SDH by providing Packet-Over-SONET (POS)/SDH Level 2 interfaces. These interfaces provide connectivity to Ethernet networks on one side of the interface, and connectivity to SONET/SDH networks on the other side of the interface. Present solutions provide the ability to map Ethernet into fixed bandwidth SONET/SDH transport pipes. This allows a customer to reserve a particular amount of WAN transport bandwidth in a fiber optic connection and to map the data onto that connection.

The shortcoming of the present solution is that the data is mapped into a single bandwidth connection, forcing the customer to reserve a particular amount of bandwidth in the fiber optic connection. If the bandwidth later proves to be inadequate due to growth, the customer will be required to replace the POS/SDH equipment and/or to lease additional bandwidth. If the customer purchases bandwidth and POS/SDH equipment having a bandwidth greatly in excess of what is presently needed, the costs may be excessively high. For the foregoing reasons, there is a need for a method and apparatus for flexibly mapping packet based LAN data onto a WAN connection.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In one embodiment of the present invention, a Local Area Network (LAN) to Wide Area Network (WAN) switch is disclosed. The LAN and WAN switch includes a programmable WAN port framer for accepting data from at least one LAN port and for flexibly mapping the data received from the LAN port into at least one WAN port. The data can be combined in different rate Synchronous Optical Network (SONET) circuits which are subsequently combined into a final SONET payload.

In one embodiment of the present invention, a method of transporting data from a LAN to a WAN in a re-configurable manner is disclosed. The received data is mapped into at least one LAN port. The received data is mapped into at least one Synchronous Transport Signal-1 (STS-1) transport stream and the stream is transmitted to at least one WAN port.

In one embodiment the LAN to WAN switch also includes a packet switch connected to the one LAN port for concentrating the traffic from the LAN ports.

In one embodiment of the method of transporting, the LAN data is concentrated prior to being mapped into transport streams.

In one embodiment the LAN to WAN switch includes a plurality of LAN ports and the packet switch create a virtual LAN from a subset of the ports.

In one embodiment of the method, LAN data is received from a plurality of LAN ports and a virtual LAN is formed from a subset of the plurality of LAN ports.

The present invention allows for a plurality of STS-1 transport streams to be created from a LAN input and transmitted over a WAN.

These and other features and objects of the invention will be more fully understood from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments which should be read in light of the accompanying drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and form a part of the specification, illustrate the embodiments of the present invention and, together with the description serve to explain the principles of the invention. In the drawings:

FIGS. 1A and 1B illustrate the use of the invention in hub and packet ring topologies respectively;

FIG. 2 illustrates a block diagram of a LAN to WAN switch including a cross-connect function;

FIG. 3 illustrates a block diagram of an Ethernet card containing LAN to WAN functionality;

FIG. 4 illustrates a block diagram for a POS mapper;

FIG. 5 illustrates the various combinations of STS-n payloads which can be formed from LAN data input using the present invention;

FIG. 6 illustrates the contents of the master register;

FIG. 7 illustrates the data and timing signals; and

FIG. 8 illustrates the multiplexing of the signals.

DESCRIPTION OF SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS

In describing a preferred embodiment of the invention illustrated in the drawings, specific terminology will be used for the sake of clarity. However, the invention is not intended to be limited to the specific terms so selected, and it is to be understood that each specific term includes all technical equivalents which operate in a similar manner to accomplish a similar purpose.

With reference to the drawings, in general, and FIGS. 1 5 through 8 in particular, the apparatus of the present invention is disclosed.

FIG. 1A illustrates the use of the invention in a hub network topology. In this topology, a Local Area Network/Wide Area Network (LAN/WAN) switch 100 is connected to a cross-connect 130, which can establish Synchronous Transfer Signal (STS)-paths 140 with other cross-connects. In a preferred embodiment, the LAN/WAN switch 100 and the cross-connect 130 form an add/drop multiplexor, which is considered to be a network element. As illustrated in FIG. 1A, a series of add/drop multiplexors can be configured in a ring configuration, including a first add/drop multiplexor 121, a second add/drop multiplexor 122, a third add/drop multiplexor 123, and a fourth add/drop multiplexor 124. In the hub configuration illustrated in FIG. 1A, a set of point-to-point links on STS-paths 140 interconnect multiple Ethernet cards. In a preferred embodiment, the Ethernet cards are plug-in units to LAN/WAN switch 100. The Ethernet cards may be located on various network elements. In the hub configuration shown in FIG. 1A, Ethernet cards which form part of add/drop multiplexors 122, 123, and 124 each have a single STE-path 140 to an Ethernet card located in the first add/drop multiplexor 121.

Ethernet cards can be based on a variety of data transport rates and physical interfaces and include but are not limited to 10BaseT, 100BaseT, or Gigabit Ethernet operating at 1 or 10 Gb/s, or data rates within that range. Because of the high speed nature of emerging Ethernet technology, it is necessary to be able to flexibly map the high data rate Ethernet signals onto WAN circuits, such as Synchronous Optical Network (SONET) or Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) circuits, for transport to other nodes. It is also possible to route SONET or SDH circuits within the node to establish connectivity between Ethernet cards.

FIG. 1B illustrates the use of the invention in a packet ring topology in which multiple Ethernet cards join into a packet ring via a single shared STS-path 140 which exists between add/drop multiplexors 121, 122, 123, and 124. In this embodiment, LAN traffic from LAN ports 110 is mapped onto the shared STS-path 140. Although illustrated as a physical ring in FIG. 1B, the ring is typically broken using a spanning tree protocol, in order to prevent circular routing of Ethernet packets.

FIG. 2 illustrates a block diagram of the invention, with interfaces being represented between the blocks as interfaces Q 220, R 224, S 228, T 232, and U 236. These labels are for convenience only and do not restrict the implementation or use of the invention in any way.

Referring to FIG. 2, a first LAN 201 and a second LAN 202 are connected to a LAN physical interface 222. The LAN physical interface 222 serves to terminate the physical connection which can correspond to a 10BASE-TX, 100BASE-TX, 1000BASE-FX, Gigabit Ethernet or other LAN physical connection. Data emanating from the other side of the LAN physical interface 222 and passing through the R interface 224 is in a format compatible with an Ethernet switch 226.

The functions of the Ethernet switch 226 include the aggregation and concentration of traffic from LANs connected to the LAN physical interface 222. In the example illustrated in FIG. 2, data is collected from the LAN A 201 and the LAN B 202 and is aggregated and concentrated into data streams (A+B)₁ through (A+B)_(i) and passed across the S interface 228 to a Packet-over-SONET (POS) mapper/cross-connect 230. In a preferred embodiment, the concentration of traffic takes place in the Ethernet switch 226 and results in traffic across the S interface 228 such that the sum of the traffic passing across the S interface 228 is less than or equal to a specified data rate X. As an example, this rate can be 200 Mb/s and will restrict the total payload being sent to the POS mapper/cross-connect 230 to 200 Mb/s or less.

FIG. 2 illustrates how data can be collected from n ports on the Q interface 220, concentrated in the Ethernet switch 226 and presented across the S interface 228 to the POS mapper/cross-connect 230.

The POS mapper/cross-connect 230 performs the functions of mapping the data into the appropriate STS-n Streams, and routing the data, through the cross-connect function, across the T interface 232 to the appropriate output card 234. Output card 234 puts the data in a format that is suitable for transmission on a WAN as defined at the U interface 236. In a preferred embodiment, the output card 234 formats the signal in an Optical Carrier-n (OC-n) signal format having a data rate in the range of 51.84 Mb/s to 9.9 Gb/s.

One of the advantages of the present invention is that data from LANs can be aggregated and placed into an STS-path of varying bandwidth. As an example, a customer may initially have a requirement for collecting and aggregating LAN traffic to form a 51.84 Mb/s (STS-1) payload which is transmitted over an OC-1 connection. At a future date, the customer's data transport requirements may have increased, resulting in the need to transport 155.55 Mb/s of data. Using the present invention, the POS mapper/cross-connect 230 can allocate more bandwidth to that customer by mapping the data from the customer's LANs to an STS-3c (155.55 Mb/s) stream. The POS mapper/cross-connect 230 also permits the ability to route the STS-3c stream to an OC-3c output card which can support the 155.55 Mb/s data rate.

FIG. 3 illustrates a board which embodies the present invention. The board can be used as part of an overall SONET/SDH cross-connect system, such as that described in our co-pending U.S. patent application which is entitled “Flexible cross-connect with data plane”, filed on Mar. 22, 1999, with Ser. No. 09/274,078 which is herein incorporated by reference.

Referring to FIG. 3 the board contains 3 quad-PHY devices 300 which interface to external Ethernet ports 302. An example of the devices which can be utilized are the LXT974 QUAD-PHY device manufactured by Level One Communications.

An Ethernet switch 310 is formed from Ethernet switch port 20 controller devices 308, which in a preferred embodiment are the Ethernet switch port controllers sold by PMC-Sierra, Inc., with part number PMC3370. A description of the PMC3370 device is given in preliminary datasheet PMC-970861 which is incorporated herein by reference. The Ethernet switch port controller devices 308 are interconnected by an Ethernet switch port controller ring bus 312.

The Ethernet switch 310 is connected to a P0S mapper 320 via a P0S mapper/Ethernet switch bus 314. The POS mapper 320 is connected to a Bridging Transmission Convergence (BTC) device 330, which is connected to a board edge connector 340. When used as part of a SONET cross-connect, the BTC device 330 formats STS-n payloads such that a cross-connect device can readily form output payloads ranging from OC-1 to OC-192. The BTC device 330 performs pre-alignment and creates composite payloads which can be transmitted across a backplane, received by a cross-connect device, appropriately cross-connected, and routed to an output board. Although the present invention has been described in the context of a full cross-connect, the formation of the STS-n payloads from the Ethernet ports occurs independently of the cross-connect functionality.

In one embodiment, the Ethernet switch port controller devices 308 each contain 8×10/100 Mb/s Ethernet Media Access Controllers (MACs) which connect to physical devices over standard IEEE 802.3 Media Independent Interfaces (MIIs), and a single channel full-duplex gigabit ENTRE packet interface (EPI). The Ethernet switch port controller devices 308 can be configured to operate in either 8×10/100 mode or ENTRE mode. The IEEE 802.3 MII standard defines the MII interfaces and is incorporated herein by reference. In one embodiment the MII interface is used in a non-standard mode with clock gapping used to control the data transfer rate.

In one embodiment of the present invention, data is transferred between the Ethernet switch 310 and the POS mapper 320 over the P0S mapper/Ethernet switch bus 314 in one of three modes. In a first mode, 6 MII ports are used on each Ethernet switch port controller device 308, with clock gapping from the POS mapper 320 used to transfer data at STS-1 rates. In a second mode, 4 MII ports are used, with clock gapping used to establish an STS-3C data transfer rate of 155.55 Mb/s. Clock gapping, in which clock cycles are skipped to control a data transfer rate, is well known to those skilled in the art. In a third mode, the MII MACs are bypassed to achieve operation at 311 Mb/s or 622 Mb/s.

By establishing variable rate connections between the POS mapper 320 and the Ethernet switch port controller devices 308 it is possible to map information from the external Ethernet ports 302 at prescribed data rates to the POS mapper 320. The use of a variable rate connection allows data to be routed into an appropriate OC-n connection.

The POS mapper 320 provides data control for transfer of 10 data from the Ethernet switch 310, with the P0S mapper 320 acting as the master and the Ethernet switch port controller 308 acting as the slave. The POS mapper 320 provides the functionality of High-speed Data Link Control (HDLC)-like framing and escape sequences. The HDLC-like framing can be used in the POS mapper 320, as specified in the IETF RFC 1662, entitled “PPP in HDLC-like framing” which is incorporated herein by reference. In one embodiment, the HDLC-like framing is used without the use of the Point-To-Point Protocol (PPP). Alternatively, the PPP can be utilized as described in the IETF REC 1662. The HDLC-like framing is based on the use of a defined flag sequence, control and frame check sequence fields, address and control field compression, and the use of transparent escape sequences. Such techniques are well known to those skilled in the art.

FIG. 4 represents a block diagram for the POS mapper 320. In a preferred embodiment, the POS mapper 320 is realized in a Xilinx XCV600 Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA). The POS mapper 320 can also be realized in an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC). As one skilled in the art would 30 know, other hardware implementations are possible, and the POS mapper 320 can also be realized in software.

Referring to FIG. 4, an upper First-In-First_Out (FIFO) and interface logic unit 406 is connected to one of the Ethernet switch port controller devices 308 via the POS mapper/Ethernet switch bus 314. A lower FIFO and interface logic unit 408 is similarly connected to an Ethernet switch port controller device 308 via the POS mapper/Ethernet switch bus 314. The upper FIFO and interface logic unit 406 and the lower FIFO and interface logic unit 408 provide the clock gapping and control logic functionality which receives data from the Ethernet switch port controller device 308 in one of the MII or ENTRE modes, as previously described.

FIG. 4 illustrates the low speed variable rate POS mappers 412 which are replicated as units LS₁ through LS₁₂. The low speed variable rate POS mappers 412 are structured for byte wide operation at 38.88 MHz. While capable of operating at an STS-6c data rate, in one embodiment rates in the range of STS-1c to STS-3c are used. The upper six low speed variable rate POS mappers 412 LS₁-LS₆ are connected to the upper FIFO and interface logic unit 406 and the lower six low speed variable rate POS mappers 412 LS₇-LS₁₂ are connected to the lower FIFO and interface logic unit 408.

Two high speed variable rate POS mappers 414 HS₁ and HE₂ are also utilized, with HS₁ being connected to the upper FIFO and interface logic unit 406 and HS₂ being connected to the lower FIFO and interface logic unit 408. The high speed variable rate POS mappers 414 are structured for 2-byte wide operation at up to STS-12c rates.

To control the reading of the data from the low speed variable rate POS mapper 412 and the high speed variable rate POS mapper 414, a strobe generation logic 424 is used in conjunction with a master register 420, the contents of which are illustrated in FIG. 6, and a SONET timing block 428, which generates timing signals which are synchronous with the SONET network.

As illustrated in FIG. 4, a mux 434 is used to combine the 5 data from the low speed variable rate POS mappers 412 and the high speed variable rate P0S mappers 414. An interface logic 436 is used to interface the signals to the next logic block and put the combined data signals in a format which is compatible with the output card 234 or the BTC device 330.

FIG. 5 illustrates the various combinations of SONET rates that can be utilized in forming the multiplexed signal in the mux 434. As shown, a combination of 12 STS-1 streams (#1) can be used, 9 STE-1 and 1 STS-3C (#2), or other configurations as illustrated in FIG. 5. In one embodiment, the STS-9C combination is not supported, thus providing only 10 combinations.

FIG. 6 illustrates the contents of the master register 420. The bits are used to configure the POS mapper 320 for the appropriate rate/port combinations for reading data from the low speed variable rate POS mapper 412 and the high speed variable rate POS mapper 414. Bits 0-11 of the master register 420 correspond to STS rates 1-12 respectively. The default value for each bit is a zero indicating that the particular STS rate is used. A value of one indicates that the particular STS rate is not used. If a zero is located at a certain bit, the next bit corresponds to an STS-1 rate. This resetting of the STS values to the bits allows the same STS rate to be used several times, thus allowing the combinations of FIG. 5 to be obtained.

For example, if the master register 420 is set to ‘000000000000’ 12 independent STS-1 streams will be formed (combination #1). That is, the next bit continually applies to an STS-1 rate since a zero was located in the previous bit. If the master register 420 is set to ‘111111111110’ an STS-12c stream is formed (combination #12). If the master register 420 is set to ‘110110110110’ four STS-3c streams are formed (combination #5) as bits 3, 6 and 9 are reassigned to an STS-1 rate so that bits 5, 8 and 11 correspond to an STS-3 rate.

FIG. 7 illustrates a timing signal 431 and a data signal 441 of FIG. 4. As can be seen, the timing signal 431 acts as a data enable signal which allows the data signal 441 to be read from the low speed variable rate P05 mappers 412 and the high speed variable rate POS mappers 414. FIG. 7 also illustrates a second timing signal 432 and a second data signal 442. As can be seen in FIG. 7, the timing signals can be staggered to allow data to be read out at the appropriate time and to be combined with other data signals in the mux 434. The strobe generation logic 424 generates the appropriate timing signals 431 in accordance with the master register 420 so as to obtain the appropriate combination of STS rates illustrated in FIG. 5.

For example, if the master register 420 was set to ‘000000000000’, then the strobe generation logic 424 would generate timing signals 431 necessary to obtain twelve STS-1 streams (combination #1 of FIG. 5) FIG. 8 illustrates logic which can be used to create the 25 multiplexed signal. This logic can reside in the mux 434 of FIG. 4. Using an AND gate 810 it is possible to combine data signal 441 with the timing signal 431 and subsequently combine all of the data signals in an OR gate 820. The data signals can be a parallel bus which is 8 bits wide. When used as a parallel bus, the timing signal 431 is fanned to the inputs of the AND gate 810. Other width buses can be utilized, in which case the timing signal 431 is fanned out across the width of the bus.

Other combinations of gates can be used to achieve this functionality and are known to those skilled in the art.

In summary, the invention provides the ability to combine 5 packet data into SONET streams operating at different rates and to transmit those streams over various SONET interfaces. The combinations, as illustrated in FIG. 5, can be obtained by combining the contents of the master register 420 with the logic in the strobe generation logic 424 to produce, data signals and timing signals which support the reading of data at the appropriate data rates from buffers. The read data can be combined in a multiplexor to form a final SONET payload. The present invention has been illustrated for the combining and multiplexing of packets. The techniques illustrated can be used to construct similar circuits for separating and demultiplexing SONET streams of varying data rates into packets for transmission on packet based networks, thus forming a WAN to LAN system.

The invention has been described as based on circuits having a bandwidth granularity of STE-1, equivalent to a data rate of 51.84 Mb/s. The invention can also be realized using Virtual Tributary-1.5 (VT1.5) circuit granularity, with the circuits operating at a rate 1.728 Mb/s. Other data rates can be utilized as the basis for the bandwidth granularity, including VT2, VT3, and VT6 rates.

Although this invention has been illustrated by reference to specific embodiments, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications may be made which clearly fall within the scope of the invention. The invention is intended to be protected broadly within the spirit and scope of the appended claims. 

1. A Local Area Network (LAN) to Wide Area Network (WAN) switch comprising: one or more LAN ports a plurality of WAN ports; a memory storing a mapping of received data from said one or more LAN ports into said plurality of WAN ports; and a programmable WAN port framer executing said mapping stored in said memory.
 2. The LAN to WAN switch described in claim 1, wherein said at least one LAN port comprises an Ethernet port operating in the range of 10 Mb/s to 10 Gb/s.
 3. The LAN to WAN switch described in claim 1, wherein at least one WAN port operates at a VT-1.5 rate or a multiple thereof.
 4. The LAN to WAN switch described in claim 1, wherein said at least one WAN port operates at an STS-1 rate or a multiple thereof.
 5. The LAN to WAN switch described in claim 1, wherein said programmable WAN framer produces a combination of STS-n output signals and wherein the combination of the STS-n output signals has a bandwidth equivalent to at least an STS-12 signal.
 6. A method for transporting data from a Local Area Network (LAN) to a Wide Area Network (WAN) in a re-configurable manner, the method comprising the steps of: receiving LAN data on at least one LAN port; mapping the LAN data into at least one STS-1 transport stream to permit traffic from n LAN ports to be mapped into m STS-1 transport streams; storing said mapping in a memory; and executing said mapping pursuant to said mapping stored in the memory.
 7. The method described in claim 6, further comprising the step of: transmitting the at least one STS-1 transport stream to a WAN compatible output port, wherein the WAN compatible output port provides transport for a plurality of STS-1 transport streams.
 8. The method described in claim 6, wherein said receiving LAN data includes receiving the LAN data on the at least one LAN port in the form of Ethernet packets at a data rate in the range of 10 Mb/s to 10 Gb/s.
 9. The method described in claim 7, wherein the WAN compatible output port supports transmission at a rate of STS-1 or a multiple thereof.
 10. A Local Area Network (LAN) to Wide Area Network (WAN) switch comprising: at least one LAN port; a packet switch, connected to said at least one LAN port, for providing concentration of traffic from said at least one LAN port; a plurality of WAN output ports, at least two of said WAN output ports operating at different rates; a memory storing a mapping of the received data into at least one of said output WAN ports; and a programmable WAN port framer, connected to said packet switch, for executing said mapping stored in the memory.
 11. (canceled)
 12. The LAN to WAN switch described in claim 10, wherein said at least one LAN port comprises an Ethernet port operating in the range of 10 Mb/s to 10 Gb/s.
 13. The LAN to WAN switch described in claim 10, wherein said at least one WAN output port operates at an STS-1 rate or a multiple thereof.
 14. The LAN to WAN switch described in claim 10, wherein said at least one WAN output port generates an OC-n compatible signal at a data rate in the range of 50 Mb/s to 10 Gb/s.
 15. A method for transporting data from a Local Area Network (LAN) to a Wide Area Network (WAN) in a re-configurable manner, the method comprising the steps of: receiving LAN data on at least one LAN port; concentrating and switching the received LAN data; mapping the concentrated LAN data into at least one STS-1 transport stream, wherein the mapping can be reconfigured to permit traffic from n LAN ports to be mapped into m STS-1 transport streams; storing said mapping in a memory; and executing said mapping pursuant to said mapping stored in the memory.
 16. The method described in claim 15, further comprising the step of: transmitting the at least one STS-1 transport stream to a WAN compatible output port, wherein the WAN compatible output port provides transport for a plurality of STS-1 transport streams.
 17. The method described in claim 15, wherein said receiving LAN data includes receiving the LAN data on the at least one LAN port in the form of Ethernet packets at a data rate in the range of 10 Mb/s to 10 Gb/s.
 18. The method described in claim 16, wherein the WAN compatible output port supports OC-n optical transmission at the rate of 50 Mb/s to 10 Gb/s.
 19. A Local Area Network (LAN) to Wide Area Network (WAN) switch comprising: a plurality of LAN ports; a packet switch connected to said plurality of LAN ports, wherein said packet switch creates a virtual LAN from a subset of said plurality of LAN ports; a memory storing a mapping of the received data into at least one of said output WAN ports; and a programmable WAN port framer, connected to said packet switch, and a plurality of WAN output ports for executing the mapping stored in said memory.
 20. (canceled)
 21. The LAN to WAN switch described in claim 19, wherein said at least one plurality of LAN ports comprise an Ethernet port operating in the range of 10 Mb/s to 10 Gb/s.
 22. The LAN to WAN switch described in claim 20, wherein said at least one WAN port operates at an STS-1 rate or a multiple thereof.
 23. The LAN to WAN switch described in claim 20, wherein said at least one WAN port generates an OC-n compatible signal at a data rate in the range of 50 Mb/s to 10 Gb/s.
 24. A method for transporting data from a Local Area Network (LAN) to a Wide Area Network (WAN) in a re-configurable manner, the method comprising the steps of: receiving LAN data on a plurality of LAN ports; forming a virtual LAN from a subset of the plurality of LAN ports; receiving data from the virtual LAN; storing a mapping of the data from the virtual LAN into at least one STS-1 transport stream; and executing said mapping to permit traffic from n LAN ports to be mapped into m STS-1 transport streams.
 25. The method described in claim 24, further comprising the step of: transmitting the at least one STS-1 transport stream to a WAN compatible output port, wherein the WAN compatible output port provides transport for a plurality of STS-1 transport streams.
 26. The method described in claim 24, wherein said receiving LAN data including receiving the LAN data on the plurality of LAN ports in the form of Ethernet packets received at a data rate in the range of 10 Mb/s to 10 Gb/s.
 27. The method described in claim 25, wherein the WAN compatible output port supports OC-n optical transmission at the rate of 50 Mb/s to 10 Gb/s. 